Polaris is not a constellation.
Polaris can be found in the constellation of Ursa Minor (also known as the Little Dipper).
eliza hutton are you from constelation pig
it debends
a constelation
A group of stars or similar.
it means something that is made from stars
city bank/ constelation
Polaris is a system of 5 starts: a yellow super-giant whose mass is approx 4.5 times that of the Sun. It has two companions which are around 30% as massive and two more which are smaller and further away.
That is the latitude at which the constelation Cancer is located overhead.
No. Polaris is a multiple star system. In the late 18th century it was resolved into two components, Polaris A and Polaris B. Later, Polaris A was resolved further into Polaris Aa and Polaris Ab. Neither Polaris Aa nor Polaris Ab are red giants. Aa is a supergiant and Ab is a dwarf; both of them are spectral class F ("yellow-white").
No. Polaris is a multiple star system. In the late 18th century it was resolved into two components, Polaris A and Polaris B. Later, Polaris A was resolved further into Polaris Aa and Polaris Ab. Neither Polaris Aa nor Polaris Ab are red giants. Aa is a supergiant and Ab is a dwarf; both of them are spectral class F ("yellow-white").
i think polaris